Joseph S. Clark Sr. High School

Joseph S. Clark Sr. High School was a high school in Tremé, New Orleans, Louisiana.[1] Clark opened in 1947 as the first high school below Canal Street to educate colored children in New Orleans.[2] [3] It was named after Joseph S. Clark, the first president of the Southern University at Baton Rouge.[4] The Rebirth Brass Band was formed at the high school in 1983.[1] The high school was operated by the charter Firstline Schools at its closing in 2019.[5] [6]

Notable alumni

gollark: Rust's async things, for instance, *may* implode if you run a blocking task in a normal async thing instead of using the dedicated threadpool for it.
gollark: In the case where it's a language runtime doing it it is quite possibly just doing cooperative multitasking internally, yes.
gollark: These have been known to exist, yes.
gollark: Thusly, modern runtimes or high performance applications will do stuff asynchronously, where they just wait for arbitrary amounts of events at once in a small threadpool.
gollark: However, this is inefficient. If you want to serve 12904172408718240 concurrent connections, you don't want to have one thread for each, especially if each one isn't used that much.

References

  1. Wyckoff, Geraldine. "Next up: The Tremé Creole Gumbo Festival!" (Archive) Louisiana Weekly. December 5, 2011. Retrieved on March 17, 2013.
  2. "Joseph S. Clark Senior High School (Closed 2016)". publicschoolreview.com. Retrieved 2019-08-12.
  3. "The Birth of the Mighty Bulldogs...Joseph S. Clark High School - CreoleGen". CreoleGen. 2014-06-20. Retrieved 2018-10-12.
  4. "The History of Joseph S. Clark Preparatory High School Archived 2013-03-18 at WebCite." (Archive) Joseph S. Clark Preparatory High School. Retrieved on March 17, 2013.
  5. "The Student-Led Backlash Against New Orleans's Charter Schools". CityLab. Retrieved 2018-10-12.
  6. Estwick, Tammy (2018-07-20). "Clark Alumni to School Board: We want to control our legacy". WDSU. Retrieved 2018-10-12.
  7. Sullivan, Steve (2017-05-17). Encyclopedia of Great Popular Song Recordings. Rowman & Littlefield. p. 277. ISBN 978-1-4422-5449-7.

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